Title: Local Anesthetics
1Local Anesthetics
- Yacoub M. Irshaid, MD, PhD, ABCP
- Department of Pharmacology
2Local Anesthetics
- Reversibly block impulse conduction along nerve
axons and other excitable membranes that utilize
sodium channels as the primary means of action
potential generation. - Are used to block pain sensation from specific
areas of the body. - Also block sympathetic vasoconstrictor impulses
to specific areas of the body.
3Schematic diagram of a primary afferent neuron
mediating pain, its synapse with a secondary
afferent in the spinal cord, and the targets for
local pain control. The primary afferent neuron
cell body is not shown. At least three
nociceptors are recognized acid, injury, and
heat receptors. The nerve ending also bears
opioid receptors, which can inhibit action
potential generation. The axon bears sodium
channels and potassium channels (not shown),
which are essential for action potential
propagation. Synaptic transmission involves
release of substance P, a neuropeptide (NP) and
glutamate and activation of their receptors on
the secondary neuron. Alpha2 adrenoceptors and
opioid receptors modulate the transmission
process.
4Local Anesthetics
- Cocaine is the first local anesthetic (for
ophthalmic use, 1884) introduced into clinical
practice. Its chronic use was associated with
psychological dependence (addiction). - Procaine was synthesized to improve upon the
clinical properties of cocaine (1905), and became
the dominant local anesthetic for 50 years. - Lidocaine (1943) is the most widely used local
anesthetic.
5Local Anesthetics
- Most agents consist of a lipophilic group
(aromatic) connected via an ester or amide
linkage to an ionizable group (tertiary amine). - They are weak bases, and exist in the body as
either uncharged base or a cation. - The cationic form is the most active form at the
receptor because it can not exit from the closed
channels.
6Local Anesthetics
- The uncharged form is important for rapid
penetration of biologic membranes, since the
receptor is not accessible from the external side
of the cell membrane. - They are much less effective when injected into
infected tissue, because low pH cause a smaller
percentage to be nonionized. - Esters usually have a shorter duration of action
because they are more prone to hydrolysis than
amides.
7Local Anesthetics
- Classification
- Amides
- Lidocaine (xylocaine), Mepivacaine, Bupivicaine,
Levobupivicaine, Prilocaine, Ropivacaine. - Esters
- Cocaine, Procaine, Tetracaine, Benzocaine.
8Local Anesthetics
- Mechanism of Action
- The primary mechanism of action is blockade of
voltage-gated sodium channels. - Local anesthetics bind to receptors near the
intracellular end of the sodium channel and block
the channel in a time- and voltage-dependent
fashion
9Local Anesthetics
- Channels in the rested state, which predominate
at more negative membrane potentials, have a much
lower affinity for local anesthetics than
activated (open state), or the inactivated
channel (closed state), which predominate at more
positive membrane potentials. - Thus, the effect is more marked in rapidly
firing axons than in resting ones.
10A Cartoon of the sodium channel in an axonal
membrane in the resting (m gates closed, h gate
open), activated (m gates open, h gate open), and
inactivated states (m gates open, h gate closed).
Recovery from the inactivated, refractory state
requires closure of the m gates and opening of
the h gate. Local anesthetics bind to a receptor
(R) within the channel and access it via the
membrane phase or from the cytoplasm.
11Local Anesthetics
- When progressively increasing concentrations of a
local anesthetic are applied to a nerve fiber,
the threshold for excitation increases, impulse
conduction slows, the rate of rise of the action
potential declines, the action potential
amplitude decreases, and finally, the ability to
generate an action potential is completely
abolished.
12Local Anesthetics
- Nerve fibers differ significantly in their
susceptibility to block by local anesthetics on
the basis of differences in size and degree of
myelination. - The smaller B and C fibers are blocked first,
followed by other sensations, and motor function
is the last to be affected.
13Local Anesthetics
14Local Anesthetics
- Other Actions
- Motor neurons are also affected and motor
paralysis can be desirable during surgery, but
can limit the ability of the patient to cooperate
during obstetric delivery and may impair
respiratory activity. - Autonomic nerve block can result in hypotension
and interfere with bladder function leading to
urinary retention.
15Local Anesthetics
- Local anesthetics have weak neuromuscular
blocking effect that are of little clinical
importance. - Some (lidocaine) local anesthetics have
antiarrhythmic effects in the heart at
concentrations lower than those needed to produce
nerve block. Others (bupivacaine, ropivacaine)
can cause lethal arrhythmias in high
concentrations.
16Local Anesthetics
- Pharmacokinetics
- Ester-based local anesthetics are rapidly broken
down in plasma (t½ lt 1 minute). - Absorption of the local anesthetic to the
systemic circulation from the site of application
depends on many factors including local blood
flow. Application to a highly vascular area
results in high blood levels of the local
anesthetic.
17Local Anesthetics
- Vasoconstrictor substances such as epinephrine
reduce the systemic absorption of the local
anesthetic from the injection site, by decreasing
blood flow, and prolong its local effect. Also,
the systemic toxic effects of the local
anesthetic are reduced.
18Local Anesthetics
- Epinephrine, when used in spinal anesthesia,
stimulates a2- adrenoceptors which inhibit
release of substance P (neurokinin-1) and reduce
sensory neuron firing ? enhancing and prolonging
local anesthesia. - Clonidine and dexmedetomidine (a2-agonists) have
been used to augment local anesthetic effect in
the subarachnoid space and peripheral nerves.
19Local Anesthetics
- Vasoconstrictors are less effective in prolonging
anesthetic action of the more lipid soluble, long
acting drugs (bupivacaine, ropivacaine) possibly
because they are highly tissue-bound. - Cocaine is peculiar in its sympathomimetic
properties. It blocks catecholamine reuptake.
20Local Anesthetics
- The distribution of the ester type local
anesthetics has not been characterized because of
the extremely short half-lives. - The amide agents are widely distributed after IV
bolus administration (??!!). They can be
sequestered in fat. - Ester-type agents are hydrolyzed in the plasma by
butyrylcholinesterase (psuedocholinesterase) to
inactive metabolites.
21Local Anesthetics
- The amide agents are metabolized in the liver by
microsomal cytochrome P450 isozymes. Toxicity may
result in patients with hepatic disease
(lidocaine half-life increases from 1.6 to 6
hours). - Reduction in hepatic blood flow also decreases
elimination of the amide agents. - There is also a possibility of drug interactions
with agents metabolized by the same isozyme
resulting in reduced elimination of the local
anesthetic.
22Local Anesthetics
- Therapeutic Uses
- To produce highly effective analgesia in well
defined regions of the body. - The usual routes of administration include
- Topical application nasal, mucosa, wound
margins. - Infiltration injection in the vicinity of
peripheral nerve endings.
23Local Anesthetics
- Nerve block injection in the vicinity of major
nerve trunks. - Injection into the epidural or subarachnoid
spaces surrounding the spinal cord. - Intravenous regional anesthesia for short
surgical procedures involving the upper and lower
limbs.
24Local Anesthetics
- The choice of agents is based on the duration of
action required - Short acting agents procaine and chloroprocaine.
- Intermediate duration of action lidocaine,
mepivacaine, prilocaine. - Long-acting agents tetracaine, bupivacaine,
levobupivacaine, ropivacaine. - The duration of action of the first 2 can be
prolonged by increasing the dose or adding a
vasoconstrictor agent (epinephrine
phenylephrine).
25Local Anesthetics
- The onset of local anesthesia can be accelerated
by the addition of NaHCO3 to the local anesthetic
solution, to increase the amount of the drug in
the more lipid soluble form. - Repeated injection of the local anesthetic can
result in tachyphylaxis (loss of effectiveness)
due to extracellular acidosis.
26Local Anesthetics
- Local anesthetics are commonly marketed as
hydrochloride salts (pH 4-6). After injection
the salts are buffered to physiologic pH by the
tissues. Repeated injection depletes the
buffering capacity of local tissue ? local
acidosis ? more of the drug in cationic form
which diffuses poorly ? less action.
27Local Anesthetics
- Other uses
- Neuropathic pain syndromes.
- Cardiac arrhythmias.
- Intravenous (lidocaine)
- Oral (mexiletine and tocainide)
28Local Anesthetics
- Adverse Effects
- Include systemic effects following absorption of
the agent from the site of administration and
direct neurotoxicity from the local effects when
administered in close proximity to the spinal
cord and major nerve trunks.
29Local Anesthetics
- Central nervous system
- At low concentration, all local anesthetics are
able to produce sleepiness, light-headedness,
visual and auditory disturbances and
restlessness. - An early symptom of local anesthetic toxicity is
circumoral and tongue numbness and a metallic
taste.
30Local Anesthetics
- At higher concentration, nystagmus and muscular
twitching occur, followed by overt tonic-clonic
convulsions. They apparently cause depression of
cortical inhibitory pathways. The stage of
unbalanced excitation is followed by generalized
CNS depression. - Premedication with parenteral benzodiazepine can
provide prophylaxis against seizures.
31Local Anesthetics
- Cocaine, a drug of abuse, may be used to obtain a
feeling of well-being. It can produce all the
adverse effects of local anesthetics in addition
to severe cardiovascular toxicity hypertension,
arrhythmias and myocardial failure. - Direct local neural toxicity
- Transient reticular irritation (or transient
neuropathic symptoms). - More with lidocaine and chloroprocaine.
32Local Anesthetics
- It may result from pooling of the local
anesthetic in the cauda equina. - Does not result from excessive sodium channel
blockade. - May be (?) due to interference with axonal
transport or disruption of calcium homeostasis.
33Local Anesthetics
- 3. Cardiovascular toxicity
- Results from effects on the cardiac and smooth
muscle membranes and indirect effects on the ANS. - Block cardiac sodium channels (antiarrhythmic).
- At extremely high concentration, they can block
calcium channels. - Cause depression of cardiac contraction and
arteriolar dilation (except cocaine) leading to
systemic hypotension.
34Local Anesthetics
- Large doses of bupivacaine and ropivacaine have
produced cardiovascular collapse. - Cocaine produces vasoconstriction and
hypertension as well as cardiac arrhythmias. Also
can lead to local ischemia and ulceration of
mucosal membranes in chronic abusers who use the
nasal route
35Local Anesthetics
- Hematologic effects Administration of large
doses of prilocaine during regional anesthesia
may lead to accumulation of the metabolite
o-toluidine, an oxidizing agent capable of
converting hemoglobin to methemoglobin.
36Local Anesthetics
- 5. Allergic reactions
- Ester-type agents are metabolized to
p-aminobenzoic acid derivatives which seem to
produce allergic reactions. - Amide-type agents are extremely unlikely to
produce allergic reactions.